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UNESCO Creative City Ballarat champions creative industries with Craft Lab 2025

"We take huge pride in providing a platform that showcases the incredible talent across our region, while strengthening the creative economy. This year's program encompasses both sector development initiatives and public engagement opportunities — showcasing how craft can generate innovation, promote sustainability and create cultural connection."

City of Ballarat Mayor Cr Tracey Hargreaves

Ballarat-based multidisciplinary artist and designer Anzara Clark, who works primarily with paper, is among the talented craftspeople selected for this year’s event. “I cannot wait to show the Ballarat community and visitors how we can manipulate papers, fibres and textiles to create fashion,” she said. “I’m looking forward to showcasing the transformation of paper into cloth and into wearable garments at Craft Lab this year.”

First Nations engagement is central to this year’s program, with the Deep Listening Project forming a cornerstone of the 2025 Craft Lab exhibition. This initiative, led by Wadawurrung artist Jenna Oldaker, will explore themes of spirit, song, story, heart, healing and history. Collaborating with the broader Indigenous community in the Ballarat region, six major installation works will be created, forming immersive ‘rooms’ within the Mining Exchange that reflect the voices and experiences of First Nations people and showcase the evolution of Indigenous engagement in the region. The Deep Listening project has been supported by Festivals Australia, represented by the Office for the Arts, Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts.

Craft Lab has steadily grown in popularity since its inaugural showing in 2021, with more than 6,000 visitors coming through the doors over four days in 2024. In 2025, visitors can expect an immersive experience where they can meet and talk with practitioners who are eager to share their secrets and trade practices. The interactive environment encourages hands-on engagement, with opportunities to touch, explore and try different crafts with expert guidance.

As a UNESCO Creative City of Craft and Folk Arts since 2019, Ballarat’s creative sector has contributed $658.4 million to the local economy, with cultural tourism growing 25% year-on-year. Craft Lab is an important part of Ballarat’s commitment to its UNESCO designation and delivers against the obligations of the Creative City Strategy and 2021-2025 Council Plan.